; Activity : A single focused thing the user can do on an Android device. Also, a java class in the Android framework, which is used as the superclass for an Activity implementation. See http://developer.android.com/reference/android/app/Activity.html. "An Activity presents a visual user interface for one focused endeavor the user can undertake." See Activity on the page: http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/fundamentals.html

+

; adb : Android Debug Bridge - a tool for communicating between the host and a target Android system (including an emulator running on the host). See http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/adb.html

; adb : Android Debug Bridge - a tool for communicating between the host and a target Android system (including an emulator running on the host). See http://developer.android.com/guide/developing/tools/adb.html

+

; ADP1 : Android Developer Phone 1

; ADP1 : Android Developer Phone 1

+

+

; ANR : Application Not Responding - this is a type of bug where Android believes a process has hung. The system may kill the process, and leave information about it in /data/anr for post-mortem analysis.

+

; Android : A robot resembling a human being - the name of the operating system produced by Google for mobile phones. Apparently, Andy Rubin, one of the original founders of Android, Inc. loves robots.

; Android : A robot resembling a human being - the name of the operating system produced by Google for mobile phones. Apparently, Andy Rubin, one of the original founders of Android, Inc. loves robots.

+

; AndroidManifest.xml : A file describing the contents, permissions and other attributes of an Android application package. See http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html

; AndroidManifest.xml : A file describing the contents, permissions and other attributes of an Android application package. See http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/manifest/manifest-intro.html

+

; Android, Inc. : A company founded by Andy Rubin and others to create a mobile phone operating system. Android, Inc. was acquired by Google in 2005.

; Android, Inc. : A company founded by Andy Rubin and others to create a mobile phone operating system. Android, Inc. was acquired by Google in 2005.

−

; ASE : Android Scripting Environment

+

+

; ASE : Android Scripting Environment - the old name of Scripting Layer for Android. See [[Android Scripting]]

== B ==

== B ==

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== C ==

== C ==

; Cliq : The US name for the Motorola Android phone.

; Cliq : The US name for the Motorola Android phone.

+

; Content Provider : An piece of software on an Android system that provides information (content) to other software elements. See http://developer.android.com/guide/topics/providers/content-providers.html. Also, a class which is the superclass for code which acts as a content provider. See the [http://developer.android.com/reference/android/content/ContentProvider.html ContentProvider class documentation]

; Cupcake : The code name for Android version 1.5.

; Cupcake : The code name for Android version 1.5.

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:

:

: Every Android application runs in its own process, with its own instance of the Dalvik virtual machine. Dalvik has been written so that a device can run multiple VMs efficiently. The Dalvik VM executes files in the Dalvik Executable (.dex) format which is optimized for minimal memory footprint. The VM is register-based, and runs classes compiled by a Java language compiler that have been transformed into the .dex format by the included "dx" tool.

: Every Android application runs in its own process, with its own instance of the Dalvik virtual machine. Dalvik has been written so that a device can run multiple VMs efficiently. The Dalvik VM executes files in the Dalvik Executable (.dex) format which is optimized for minimal memory footprint. The VM is register-based, and runs classes compiled by a Java language compiler that have been transformed into the .dex format by the included "dx" tool.

+

:

+

:See [[Android Dalvik VM]] for more information

; Donut : The code name for Android version 1.6

; Donut : The code name for Android version 1.6

; Dream : Code name for the mobile phone hardware publicly called the t-Mobile G1, in the United States.

; Dream : Code name for the mobile phone hardware publicly called the t-Mobile G1, in the United States.

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== G ==

== G ==

; G1 : The name of the first Android-based mobile phone, from t-Mobile.

; G1 : The name of the first Android-based mobile phone, from t-Mobile.

+

; Galaxy : The name of the first Samsung Android phone

; Galaxy : The name of the first Samsung Android phone

−

; Gingerbread ; The code name for Android version 3.0(??)

+

+

; Gingerbread : The code name for Android version 2.3

+

; Goldfish : The name of a virtual ARM platform provided by the emulator.

; Goldfish : The name of a virtual ARM platform provided by the emulator.

:

:

:Goldfish executes ARM926T instructions and has hooks for input and output -- such as reading key presses from or displaying video output in the emulator. There is a "goldfish" configuration file for compiling the Linux kernel to run with this emulated platform.

:Goldfish executes ARM926T instructions and has hooks for input and output -- such as reading key presses from or displaying video output in the emulator. There is a "goldfish" configuration file for compiling the Linux kernel to run with this emulated platform.

; Google : A large web search company, and primary developer of Android

; Google : A large web search company, and primary developer of Android

+

+

== H ==

+

; Honeycomb : The code name for Android version 3.0 - especially targeted at table computers

== I ==

== I ==

−

; init : the first user-space program run in the Android system. It is not a standard Linux-style 'init' program (which processes an /etc/inittab file). Rather, it processes a script called init.rc in the root directory of the file system.

; init : the first user-space program run in the Android system. It is not a standard Linux-style 'init' program (which processes an /etc/inittab file). Rather, it processes a script called init.rc in the root directory of the file system. See [[Android_Booting#.27init.27|Android Booting#'init']]

+

; Intent : A facility to send messages between different Android components. A message is conveyed using an Intent object, which is a data structure holding a description of an operation to be performed, or of something that has happened and is being announced.

; Intent : A facility to send messages between different Android components. A message is conveyed using an Intent object, which is a data structure holding a description of an operation to be performed, or of something that has happened and is being announced.

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:It is important to note that while the Java language is used for Android applications, the Java bytecode and Java virtual machine are not. for more information, see the entry for Dalvik.

:It is important to note that while the Java language is used for Android applications, the Java bytecode and Java virtual machine are not. for more information, see the entry for Dalvik.

; JDK : Java Development Kit

; JDK : Java Development Kit

+

; Jellybean : The code name for Android versions 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3

+

; JNI : Java Native Interface ([http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Native_Interface wikipedia entry]) is a programming framework that allows Java code to call or be called by "native" code (that is, code compiled in another language such as C, C++ or assembly).

+

+

== K ==

+

; KitKat: The release name for Android version 4.4

== L ==

== L ==

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; mahimahi: The machine name used in the kernel for the development board used for the Nexus One product.

; mahimahi: The machine name used in the kernel for the development board used for the Nexus One product.

; MSM : Mobile Station Modem. Chipset manufactured by Qualcomm. Can for instance be found in cell phones containing the Snapdragon chipsets (HTC Desire/Nexus One).

; MSM : Mobile Station Modem. Chipset manufactured by Qualcomm. Can for instance be found in cell phones containing the Snapdragon chipsets (HTC Desire/Nexus One).

+

+

== N ==

+

; NDK : [http://developer.android.com/sdk/ndk/index.html Native Development Kit]. A set of tools, build files and instructions to generate native code (usually libraries) to be used with Android systems. Native libraries are most often used as part of JNI (to allow Java code to call C code, or vice versa).

== O ==

== O ==

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== S ==

== S ==

; Saphire

; Saphire

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+

; SL4A : Scripting Layer for Android - an execution environment that let's users use scripting languages (such as Python or Ruby), instead of Java, to write programs for Android. See [[Android Scripting]]

+

; SGL : 2D graphics layer for Android applications

; SGL : 2D graphics layer for Android applications

; SQLite : A powerful and lightweight relational database engine used by the Android system components, and available to all Android applications.

; SQLite : A powerful and lightweight relational database engine used by the Android system components, and available to all Android applications.

== T ==

== T ==

−

; TARGET_PRODUCT : An environment variable used by the build system to indicate the product that the software should be built for. This and other TARGET_* variables are set using the choosecombo() function in build/envsetup.sh.

+

; TARGET_PRODUCT : An environment variable used by the build system to indicate the product that the software should be built for. This and other TARGET_* variables are set using the choosecombo() function in build/envsetup.sh. If not set, the TARGET_* variables will use defaults when you run the 'm' alias, after source-ing build/envsetup.sh into your shell environment. Otherwise, use the choosecombo() function to set them.

−

:

+

−

:If not set, the TARGET_* variables will use defaults when you run the 'm' alias, after source-ing build/envsetup.sh into your shell environment. Otherwise, use the choosecombo() function to set them.

+

:

:

:ex: $ cd mydroid ; source build/envsetup.sh ; choosecombo

:ex: $ cd mydroid ; source build/envsetup.sh ; choosecombo

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Back to [[Android Portal]]

Back to [[Android Portal]]

+

+

== Z ==

+

; zygote : The first Dalvik virtual machine instance. All other java applications that are started in the system are spawned from zygote.

D

Virtual Machine in which Android applications are run. This VM executes Dalvik bytecode, which is compiled from programs written in the Java language. Note that the Dalvik VM is not a Java VM (JVM).

Every Android application runs in its own process, with its own instance of the Dalvik virtual machine. Dalvik has been written so that a device can run multiple VMs efficiently. The Dalvik VM executes files in the Dalvik Executable (.dex) format which is optimized for minimal memory footprint. The VM is register-based, and runs classes compiled by a Java language compiler that have been transformed into the .dex format by the included "dx" tool.

Code name for the mobile phone hardware publicly called the t-Mobile G1, in the United States.

Droid

The name for an upcoming Android phone by Motorola (I believe this is the high-end phone, and Cliq is the low-end phone?)

E

Eclair

The code name for Android version 2.1

F

fastboot

a program which communicates with the developer firmware, and which is capable of loading new software on the ADP1 phone (including re-writing the flash partitions on the device). See Android Fastboot

FreeType

An open-source set of fonts and font system

Froyo

Frozen Yogurt - The code name for Android version 2.2

G

G1

The name of the first Android-based mobile phone, from t-Mobile.

Galaxy

The name of the first Samsung Android phone

Gingerbread

The code name for Android version 2.3

Goldfish

The name of a virtual ARM platform provided by the emulator.

Goldfish executes ARM926T instructions and has hooks for input and output -- such as reading key presses from or displaying video output in the emulator. There is a "goldfish" configuration file for compiling the Linux kernel to run with this emulated platform.

Google

A large web search company, and primary developer of Android

H

Honeycomb

The code name for Android version 3.0 - especially targeted at table computers

the first user-space program run in the Android system. It is not a standard Linux-style 'init' program (which processes an /etc/inittab file). Rather, it processes a script called init.rc in the root directory of the file system. See Android Booting#'init'

Intent

A facility to send messages between different Android components. A message is conveyed using an Intent object, which is a data structure holding a description of an operation to be performed, or of something that has happened and is being announced.

J

Java

Java is a programming language originally developed by Sun, and used to develop Android applications.

It is important to note that while the Java language is used for Android applications, the Java bytecode and Java virtual machine are not. for more information, see the entry for Dalvik.

JDK

Java Development Kit

Jellybean

The code name for Android versions 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3

JNI

Java Native Interface (wikipedia entry) is a programming framework that allows Java code to call or be called by "native" code (that is, code compiled in another language such as C, C++ or assembly).

K

KitKat

The release name for Android version 4.4

L

Linux

An open source operating system kernel, developed originally by Linus Torvalds, but over time by many thousands of developers worldwide.

Live-android

A project to create an Android live-CD, for running Android on generic x86 platforms.

logcat

A command to view messages in one of the system logs. See Android logger

M

manifest file

See AndroidManifest.xml

mahimahi

The machine name used in the kernel for the development board used for the Nexus One product.

MSM

Mobile Station Modem. Chipset manufactured by Qualcomm. Can for instance be found in cell phones containing the Snapdragon chipsets (HTC Desire/Nexus One).

N

NDK

Native Development Kit. A set of tools, build files and instructions to generate native code (usually libraries) to be used with Android systems. Native libraries are most often used as part of JNI (to allow Java code to call C code, or vice versa).

O

OpenGL ES

3D graphics system and API for Android applications

R

repo

Android repository manager. This is a wrapper program (written in Python) over the git tool, for managing the multiple git repositories that make up the entire Android code base. See http://source.android.com/download/using-repo

rild

Radio-Interface-Link daemon. This is the daemon which handles communication between the rest of the Android system and the "radio interface" (otherwise known as the phone portion of an Android-based mobile phone system). In the simulator, since the phone hardware is not present, there is a program which runs to simulate the radio interface.

S

Saphire

SL4A

Scripting Layer for Android - an execution environment that let's users use scripting languages (such as Python or Ruby), instead of Java, to write programs for Android. See Android Scripting

SGL

2D graphics layer for Android applications

SQLite

A powerful and lightweight relational database engine used by the Android system components, and available to all Android applications.

T

TARGET_PRODUCT

An environment variable used by the build system to indicate the product that the software should be built for. This and other TARGET_* variables are set using the choosecombo() function in build/envsetup.sh. If not set, the TARGET_* variables will use defaults when you run the 'm' alias, after source-ing build/envsetup.sh into your shell environment. Otherwise, use the choosecombo() function to set them.

ex: $ cd mydroid ; source build/envsetup.sh ; choosecombo

The options for TARGET_PRODUCT depend on entries in the AndroidProducts.mk files under build/target/products and vendor/*/*/AndroidProducts.mk in your repository.

toolbox

The name of a multi-function program in the Android system. This program contains code for the single program toolbox to act like several different programs and utilities. Normally 'toolbox' is stored in /system/bin, and is symlinked to other names. It uses argv[0] to determine which program to behave like, when run. It is very similar in this regard to 'busybox', which another multi-function program used in many other embedded Linux systems.

Trout

ARM linux kernel machine ID for the HTC Dream hardware (used in the t-Mobile G1 and the ADP1)